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Re: Skin Dose from Multiple Plane Sources
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10CFR20.1201 says it all - or at least most of it: "The assigned deep-dose
equivalent or shallow-dose equivalent must be for the part of the body
receiving the highest exposure. The deep-dose equivalent, eye dose equivalent
and shallow-dose equivalent may be assessed from surveys or other radiation
measurements for the purpose of demonstrating compliance with the occupational
dose limits, if the individual monitoring device was not in the region of
highest potential exposure, or the results of indiviudal monitoring are
unavailable."
Thus, if there are multiple spots of contamination providing skin dose
associated with one event, the reported skin dose would be the highest. The
reported dose for multiple events depends on how detailed your recordkeeping
is. If you record exactly where the exposure occurred and can demonstrate
that the affected areas do not overlap, then only the highest need be
reported. If you don't keep detailed records of the exposure location, you
must add together the highest skin dose from each event. There is additional
guidance in the NRC's answer to "question 176" (6th set of questions and
answers re the new 10 CFR 20): "...As long as it can be shown that the total
shallow dose equivalent does not exceed 50 rem at any one location on the skin
of the whole body there is no violation...."
Also note 10 CFR20.1003, definition for "Shallow Dose Equivalent":
"Shallow-dose equivalent, which applies to the external exposure of the skin
or an extremity, is taken as the dose equivalent at a tissue depth of 0.007
cemtimeter (7 mg/cm2) averaged over an area of 1 square centimeter."
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Received: 30 Jan 1996 10:41:55 Sent: 30 Jan 1996 09:40:52
From:"root@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu" <root@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu>
To: Multiple,recipients,of,list,radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu
Subject: Skin Dose from Multiple Plane Sources
Reply-to: radsafe@romulus.ehs.uiuc.edu
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X-Orcl-Application: X-Comment: Radiation Safety Distribution List
I am looking for a broad cross section of opinions on the following
subject. I have received a couple of different opinions and I also
have my own. I am hoping that if enough opinions are expressed that
we should statistically gravitate toward the true answer (interesting
concept, huh?).
If a person has multiple plane sources on the same organ (i.e.
SDE,WB), how should the dose be reported?
a. Add the cumulative dose from both plane sources since they are both
supplying dose to the same organ (skin)
b. Take the highest dose calculated of the two and use it to represent
the entire contamination event.
c. Calculate the dose to 1 cm^2 of skin from the highest detector
reading (i.e. 15.5 cm^2 GM) and use it to represent the entire
contamination event.
Please feel free to refer to existing reference documents, none of
which I have yet to find. This is a serious enquiry and I would be
more than happy to keep statistics and references based upon responses
and later repost the results. I have my own opinion, but I wouldn't
want to bias any of the responses.
Glen Vickers
HP, Nuclear Power Generation
815-458-2801 ext. 2792
BRZGV@ccmail.ceco.com
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